direct = shut
indirect = ark
I think
He asked her to open the door.(indirect sentence) He asked her:"Please, open the door" (direct sentence)
"Close the door." is a complete sentence. The direct object is door.
Direct force is when an object touches another like opening a door. You apply direct force by pulling the door. On the other hand with indirect force, there is no contact a good example is magnets and gravity.
The nouns in the sentence are:book, direct object of the verb 'dropped'door, object of the preposition 'near'
The nouns are: dent door ball grass The objective compliments in the sentence "The dent in the door was caused by that ball on the green grass" are door and grass. Dent is the subject. Caused is the verb. Ball is the direct object.
You can use "me" as the object of a sentence to answer a question. When asked who's at the door, the answer, "Me." is the object of the sentence "It's me."; the "it's" or "it is" is implied.
a verb that needs an object to make sense- apex
The door is a solid object.
The word 'hostess' functions as both a verb and a noun.Example uses:Martha will hostess the fund raiser this year. (verb)A hostess greeted us at the door. (noun, subject of the sentence)I called the hostess to confirm our reservation. (noun, direct object of the verb 'called')We brought flowers for the hostess. (noun, object of the preposition 'for')
The object of the prepositional phrase "with such force" would be the noun or pronoun that is receiving the action described by "force." For example, in the sentence "He opened the door with such force," the object of the prepositional phrase is "the door."
The two kinds of complements are subject complements(which follow a linking verb) renaming the subject, and object complements (which follow a direct object) renaming the direct object.Subject complement: Ms. Burns is my new teacher.Object complement: This is my new teacher, Ms. Burns.
The active voice sentence "Who is knocking at the door?" can be changed to passive voice as "By whom is the door being knocked?" In the passive voice sentence, the subject of the active voice sentence ("who") becomes the object of the preposition "by," and the verb "knocking" is changed to "being knocked," with the helping verb "is" moved to the appropriate position.